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Friends will expose your kids to drugs. But there are ways to fight back

(Courier Journal, July 20) Your child is more likely to try drugs if they have friends that use drugs, according to research. 

FDA issues warning after synthetic marijuana tainted with rat poison sickens hundreds

(USA Today, July 20) A bad batch of synthetic marijuana – sold under brand names like Spice, K2 and AK 47 – is behind a rash of uncontrolled bleeding incidents in Washington, D.C.

New Study: Marijuana Does Not Reduce Pain or Opioid Use

With the rise of opioid addiction, people across the nation are considering marijuana as a substitute for prescription painkillers.

CDC: Rise in Number of Fentanyl Deaths in 10 States

(July 17) Fentanyl and its more powerful derivatives are behind a growing number of opioid overdose deaths in 10 states, according to a new report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

More People Are Inhaling Heroin, and It's Destroying Brain Tissue

(Gizmodo, July 9) More heroin users are inhaling the drug and it’s causing them irreversible brain damage and dementia, according to a recent report published in JAMA Neurology.

How opioid use can lead to addiction

(Mayo Clinic, May 11) Anyone who uses prescription opioids can become addicted,  though other factors – such as length of use and personal history— may play a role.

prescription medicine spilling out of bottle

Chronic pain remains the same or gets better after stopping opioid treatment

(Washington State University, July 2) Stopping the use of opioids does not make pain (that isn’t related to cancer) worse, according to research out of Washington State University.

Opioid addiction and overdoses in children devastate their parents

(The Washington Post, June 30) A person’s addiction to opioids can cause their parents to develop C-PTSD – complex post-traumatic stress disorder – due to the constant stress and worry they go through.

Opioids' hidden epidemic—fraudulent drug treatment centers

(CNBC, June 29) The nationwide opioid epidemic has led to a surge in the number of addiction treatment centers over the last few years. 

Opioid overdose deaths may be undercounted by 70,000

(NBC News, June 27) Since 1999, as many as 70,000 people may have died from opioid overdoses, but weren’t added to the national opioid overdose death toll, according to a new report from researchers at the University of Pittsburgh.